Nexcod Infotech

Nexcod Infotech Nexcod Infotech is an IT consultancy for Web Design & Development, SEO, Digital Marketing, Mobile Application Development like Android, iOS, Windows.

Wish you have a year even better than the best and put smiles on the faces of everyone you come across
01/01/2017

Wish you have a year even better than the best and put smiles on the faces of everyone you come across

26/12/2016
'Pokemon Go' players stumble on hidden history=====================================PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) -- Historical m...
25/07/2016

'Pokemon Go' players stumble on hidden history
=====================================
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) -- Historical markers have long dotted the landscape, often barely noticed by passers-by — until they became treasure-filled stops this month on the "Pokemon Go" trail.

Players hunting for fictional creatures on their smartphones are now visiting real-life memorial plaques, statues, mosaics and landmarks, ranging from a Civil War battlefield in Chancellorsville, Virginia, to a Hells Angels clubhouse on New Zealand's North Island.

Some don't bother to linger at these Pokestops, staying just long enough to stock up on the virtual balls they'll use to bonk and capture the next Pokemon. But for others, the GPS-powered "augmented reality" game is heightening awareness of the history and geography of their neighborhoods.

"Before I was just going from Point A to Point B, but now I'm learning things," said 15-year-old Jaiden Cruz as he walked by a plaque Wednesday in downtown Providence, Rhode Island, marking where Abraham Lincoln spoke at an old railroad hall in 1860. The plaque is a Pokestop, and shortly before Cruz arrived, another player dropped a "lure module" that attracts Pokemon to the site.

The 380-year-old city abounds with Pokestops, including the nation's oldest Baptist church — founded by religious dissident Roger Williams in 1638 — and a stone marking where French troops camped during the Revolutionary War.

"It gets you to learn about your surroundings," said 59-year-old Cheryl DiMarzio, who on the advice of her daughter ventured into an urban park to capture an owl-like Pidgey and some purple rodent Rattatas. "Different landmarks, the statues and historical places."

How such markers became the backbone of the wildly popular video game that launched this month is a story that goes back at least five years, when tech giant Google signed a licensing agreement to use The Historical Marker Database , a volunteer-run website that has tracked the geographic coordinates of more than 80,000 historical markers around the world, most of them in the United States.

J.J. Prats, founder and publisher of the Virginia-based marker database, said many but not all the Pokestops and Pokemon gyms — where players send their creatures into battle — are from his website. He's thrilled.

"Hopefully people will take their eyes off the phone and read the historical markers," Prats said.

The game has delighted Anthony Golding, a middle school history teacher in Tupelo, Mississippi, who is looking forward to incorporating Pokestops into his curriculum in the fall.

He has replenished his Pokemon wares where the Civil War's Battle of Tupelo was fought, at monuments to Civil Rights Movement figures, and at a pedestal that holds the Tupelo Meteorite. But Elvis Presley holds the monopoly on Tupelo's Pokestops, from his birthplace to the Main Street store where he got his first guitar .

"Pretty much every Elvis landmark has a Pokestop devoted to it," Golding said.

Prats said his website's views have quadrupled since the game launched , possibly because gamers are looking to get ahead and find new stops. His editors in recent days have had to strike down a rash of "bogus" submissions for markers that have no historical significance but that he suspects might be near where players live or where businesses are hoping for foot traffic , he said.

Game maker Niantic Labs , which began as an internal Google startup, originally used the markers for its earlier game, Ingress, which attracted a smaller but dedicated community when it launched in 2012. Niantic, which spun off from Google last year, did not respond to emails seeking comment about its "Pokemon Go" locations.

But the Ingress website gives clues about how the Pokestops were created. Before closing off submissions, Ingress invited its users to identify new locations for "portals," real-life places of cultural significance that gamers try to capture and connect on the Ingress app.

The company sought spots "with a cool story, a place in history or educational value" or a "cool piece of art or unique architecture." It prized libraries and little-known gems, and welcomed places of worship because they are "a nod to the otherworldly" that amplified the game's mysterious tone.

Ingress player John Jannotti, who teaches computer science at Brown University, said he began stumbling upon the hidden history of his Providence neighborhood, including obscure stone markers showing the location of race riots where white mobs attacked black residents in the early 19th century. He even submitted some portals of his own.

Now, those markers are Pokestops attracting a whole new community.

Golding, the teacher, said he frequently runs into his students in downtown Tupelo while playing the game.

"It's probably more about the game for them right now," Golding said. "After the newness kind of wears off, we can start to have those conversations about the historical significance behind those Pokestops."

16/07/2016

Twitter, Facebook move quickly to stem celebrations of Nice attack
===================================================
By Yasmeen Abutaleb and Dustin Volz

SAN FRANCISCO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Twitter Inc moved swiftly to remove posts from Islamic extremists glorifying a truck attack in Nice, France, watchdog groups said Friday, in a rare round of praise for a platform that has often struggled to contain violent propaganda.

A spate of violence over the past several months has posed numerous challenges to social media companies. The unfolding military coup in Turkey was marked first by restrictions on social media, internet monitoring groups said, but the crackdown appeared to ease as the events unfolded and numerous citizens broadcast live video on Facebook and sent tweets.[nL8N1A14TL]

U.S. and French authorities on Friday were still trying to determine whether the Tunisian man who drove a truck into Bastille Day crowds on Thursday, killing 84 people, had ties to Islamic militants. [nL8N1A10SO]

At least 50 Twitter accounts praising the attacks used the hashtag Nice in Arabic, according to the Counter Extremism Project, a private group that monitors and reports extremist content online. Many accounts appeared almost immediately after the attack and shared images praising the carnage, the group said.

The pattern was similar to what was seen on Twitter after attacks last year and earlier this year in Paris and Brussels. But Twitter, which once took a purist approach to free speech but has since revised its rules, took action much more quickly this week.

"Twitter moved with swiftness we have not seen before to erase pro-attack tweets within minutes," Counter Extremism Project said in a statement. "It was the first time Twitter has reacted so efficiently."

Rabbi Abraham Cooper, head of the Simon Wiesenthal Center's Digital Terrorism and Hate project, also said Twitter had responded with unusual alacrity.

Twitter did not provide any information about account suspensions, but said in a statement that it condemns terrorism and bans it on its site.

Twitter, Facebook Inc and other internet firms have ramped up their efforts over the past two years to quickly remove violent propaganda that violates their terms of service.

Both companies continue to face major challenges in distinguishing between graphic images that are shared to glorify or celebrate attacks and those shared by witnesses who are documenting events.

Facebook's "community standards" dictate what types of content are and are not allowed on the platform. Those standards explicitly ban "terrorism" and related content, such as posts or images that celebrate attacks or promote violence.

Yet the company's policies around graphic images are more nuanced. Facebook, like most large internet companies, relies on users and eagle-eyed advocacy groups to report objectionable content to teams of human editors, who then review each submission and decide whether a post should be deleted.

At Facebook, those reviewers receive more specific guidance beyond the public community standards when it comes to deciding what to do with reported graphic images, a spokeswoman said. But she declined to elaborate on the company's criteria.

"One of the most sensitive situations involves people sharing violent or graphic images of events taking place in the real world. In those situations, context and degree are everything," Facebook said in a blog post last week.

NEW TACTICS

Internet companies have continually updated their terms of service over the past two years to establish clearer and in many cases stricter ground rules on what content is permissible on their platforms.

In response to pressure by U.S. lawmakers and counterextremism groups, Facebook and YouTube have moved recently toward implementing some automated processes to block or rapidly remove Islamic State videos and similar material. [http://reut.rs/28U55Vp]

That has not stopped Islamist militants from celebrating attacks online and even updating their tactics. Some Islamic State supporters used Twitter hashtags that were trending globally to celebrate the Nice attacks, such as , and , so that their tweets were shown to a wider audience, according to screenshots from the Wiesenthal Center.

(Reporting by Yasmeen Abutaleb in San Francisco and Dustin Volz in Washington; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Andrew Hay)

16/07/2016

Social media access restricted in Turkey
===============================
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Access was restricted in Turkey on Friday to Facebook Inc , Twitter Inc and Alphabet Inc's YouTube shortly after news that a military coup was under way, according to two internet monitoring groups.

Twitter's official global public policy team tweeted: "We have no reason to think we've been fully blocked in , but we suspect there is an intentional slowing of our traffic in country."

YouTube said it was aware of reports its site was down in Turkey but that "our systems seem to be functioning normally."

Facebook declined to comment.

Turkey Blocks, a group that monitors internet shutdowns in the country, and Dyn, which monitors internet performance and traffic globally, both reported it was difficult or impossible to access social media services in Turkey.

Turkey's military said on Friday it had seized power, but the prime minister said the attempted coup would be put down.

The Turkish government under President Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly moved to block social media in periods of crisis and political uncertainty. It was not immediately clear whether the government or another actor ordered the block late Friday.

Erdogan took to Twitter to speak to Turkish citizens, although he has said in the past that he is against social media. He also used Apple Inc's FaceTime to deliver a statement to a local TV station, where he said the uprising would be unsuccessful.

After the coup was underway, Erdogan tweeted: "I call our nation to the airports and the squares to take ownership of our democracy and our national will."

The government normally implements its internet restrictions through orders to Turkey's main internet service providers.

The Turkish government has throttled social media at least three times this year, said Access Now, a digital rights advocacy group.

"People in Turkey will need access to information and, if there is violence, access to emergency services - all of which depend on stable communications channels," Access Now said in a statement.

Some social media users within Turkey reported late Friday that they were able to access Facebook, Twitter and YouTube normally and no longer needed to use a virtual private network, which can access the internet via another country.

(Reporting by Yasmeen Abutaleb in San Francisco; Editing by James Dalgleish)

15/07/2016

Barracuda announces cloud-ready next generation Firewall
==============================================
NEW DELHI: IT solutions provider Barracuda today announced the availability of its NextGen Firewall F-Series (version 7.0). It is designed for organizations using public cloud platforms like Microsoft Azure and Amazon AWS.

Barracuda NextGen Firewall enables intelligent network perimeters at headquarters, remote and branch offices, and satellite locations. It can be natively deployed in public cloud platforms.

The new version provides cloud-based central management support in Microsoft Azure for an unlimited number of managed firewalls within a tenant and configuration cluster. This allows organizations to move workloads and applications to Azure.

It also offers administrators an overview of cloud deployments, including dedicated dashboard widgets that display data such as public IP, domain name and DNS name received from the cloud datacenter where the NextGen Firewall is hosted, and the cloud instance type where the firewall is running.

The NextGen Firewall F-Series includes advanced next-generation security capabilities such as application and user awareness, fully integrated Intrusion Prevention System (IPS), web and email security, and fully integrated Advanced Threat Detection.

The solution claims to help clients prevent data exfiltration from botnets and spyware, with the ability to identify and block infected rogue endpoints in real time.

"Leveraging Barracuda's global threat intelligence framework through new DNS sinkholing technology, customers have the functionality to help prevent confidential data from leaving the organization," as per the company.

Users can also scale across multiple locations with a "configure once, deploy many" management model that allows up to thousands of firewalls to be deployed, managed and monitored from a single pane of glass.

14/07/2016

Lenovo launches wooden-edition Vibe K4 Note
====================================
New Delhi, July 14 (IANS) Chinese smartphone major Lenovo on Thursday launched Vibe K4 Note in a wooden-edition variant at Rs 11,499 which is now available for purchanse on Amazon.

K4 Note features 5.5-inch full-HD display with a 178-degree wide viewing angle and has twin front ported stereo speakers enabled by Dolby Atmos.

The smartphone sports a 13MP phase-detection autofocus (PDAF) rear camera and a 5MP front camera.

The device is powered by 64-bit MediaTek octa-core processor paired up with 3GB of RAM and houses a 3300mAh battery.

K4 Note has 16GB of internal storage that can be expanded up to 128GB, comes with fingerprint sensor and has USB-OTG (on the go) and NFC support.

The smartphone also features TheaterMax technology that can create an immersive large screen experience with smooth graphics, lifelike surround sound and responsive 3D.

14/07/2016

Harvesting renewable energy from mobile phone base stations
================================================
Sydney, July 14 (IANS) A team of Australian researchers has found a way to harvest renewable or ambient energy from mobile phone base stations to power battery-operated wireless sensors.

Lead researcher Salman Durrani from Australian National University said current wireless sensors for buildings, biomedical applications or wildlife monitoring use batteries which are often difficult to replace.

The team accurately modelled how much energy it takes to sense and transfer information by wireless sensors. They are working on further ways to analyse the problem.

"A major problem hindering the widespread deployment of wireless sensor networks is the need to periodically replace batteries," said Durrani.

Wireless sensors are used in various aspects of daily life, including usage to measure temperature, wind speed, light, humidity and soil moisture to optimise the growth of crops and sports to collect performance data from athletes.

The team found it was feasible to replace batteries with energy harvested from solar or ambient radio frequency sources such as communication towers or other mobile phone base stations, with communication delays typically limited to less than a few hundred milliseconds.

"If we can use energy harvesting to solve the battery replacement problem for wireless sensors, we can implement long-lasting monitoring devices for health, agriculture, mining, wildlife and critical national infrastructure, which will improve the quality of life," Durrani added in a paper published in the journal IEEE.

13/07/2016

Nobody really likes their smartwatches except Apple Watch users
==================================================
NEW YORK (AP) — The warrantless use of a controversial cellphone tracking device in a criminal investigation is unconstitutional, a federal judge ruled Tuesday as he tossed out evidence seized during an international drug investigation.

U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III in Manhattan said in a written ruling that using devices known as a "Stingray," ''Hailstorm," or "TriggerFish" to locate a suspect's phone is unconstitutional without a warrant.

Pauley rejected the discovery of narcotics, three digital scales, empty zip lock bags and other drug paraphernalia that was seized from a Manhattan apartment during an international drug-trafficking organization probe by the Drug Enforcement Administration.

The judge said the search violated the Fourth Amendment's guarantee that people shall be secure in their homes from unreasonable searches and seizures.

"Absent a search warrant, the government may not turn a citizen's cell phone into a tracking device," Pauley wrote.

He noted that the DEA had obtained other search warrants in connection with the investigation and could have obtained one for the cell phone tracking device, as well. And he said the Department of Justice has since changed its internal policies and now requires that government agents obtain a warrant before utilizing such a devic

e.

The ruling was praised by the American Civil Liberties Union, including attorney Nathan Freed Wessler.

"After decades of secret and warrantless use of Stingray technology by federal law enforcement to track phones, a federal court has finally held the authorities to account," Wessler said in a statement. "The feds are now firmly on notice that when they hide their intent to use invasive surveillance technology from courts and fail to get a warrant, their evidence will be suppressed. This opinion strongly reinforces the strength of our constitutional privacy rights in the digital age."

A message left with federal prosecutors was not immediately returned.

Google notifies users of 4,000 state-sponsored cyber attacks per month - executive======================================...
12/07/2016

Google notifies users of 4,000 state-sponsored cyber attacks per month - executive
===================================================
(Reuters) - A senior executive of Alphabet Inc's Google unit said on Monday that the company was notifying customers of 4,000 state-sponsored cyber attacks per month.

Speaking at a Fortune magazine tech conference in Aspen, Colorado, Google senior vice president and Alphabet board member Diane Greene mentioned the figure while touting Google's security prowess.

The internet search leader, which develops the Android mobile system and also offers email and a range of other applications for consumers, has led the way in notifying users of government spying. Others, including Microsoft Corp , have since followed suit.

Google had previously said that it had been issuing tens of thousands of warnings every few months and that customers often upgraded their security in response.

Address

1021, West Field Shopping Center, B/S Tanishq Showroom, Ghod Dod Road
Surat
395007

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 8pm
Tuesday 9am - 8pm
Wednesday 9am - 8pm
Thursday 9am - 8pm
Friday 9am - 8pm
Saturday 9am - 8pm

Telephone

+91 7228877100

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Nexcod Infotech posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Nexcod Infotech:

Share

Category